THE VERDICT -- robert gardner
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For the city of Newport Beach, 1928 was a banner year.
Before 1928, Balboa was a kind of hokey Sin City. Oh, we had Tony Cornero
landing illegal liquor at the city dock. We had Ted the Bootlegger
distributing his wares rather publicly. And, of course, we had our
gamblers running gambling joints, which were strictly illegal (except
that our City Council said they were legal).
But that was all rather small potatoes before 1928.
Then the new Rendezvous was built and crowds of hundreds became crowds of
thousands. Because there was no public parking, dancers parked from
McFadden Place to the Wedge and from there walked to the Rendezvous and
thought nothing of it.
But with that big crowd of dancers came a small crowd that always follows
a big crowd, a group I shall call the hell raisers.
And who did we have to handle the hell raisers? Our new chief of police,
Rowland Hodgkinson, whose background in law enforcement left something to
be desired.
When appointed, he and his mother ran a hamburger joint on Main Street.
And who did this hamburger merchant cum chief of police hire as the new
police department? He hired three middle-aged men whose experience in law
enforcement equaled his own -- nada.
They were George Callihan, who ran some rental cottages named Callihan’s
Court; Frank Naylor, whose wife was the postmistress on Balboa Island;
and Ken Gorton, whose only outside activity I could see was playing golf
at the Santa Ana Country Club regularly with Phil Harris and Dick
Whitson, the postmaster and manager of the Rendezvous, plus being my
brother-in-law.
He was a very patient brother-in-law. I moved in with him and my sister
in 1921 and stayed until I married in 1941. But enough of personal
history.
Back to the saga of the three middle-aged policemen whose job it was to
control the mini-mob on Main Street on Saturday night. I saw them in
action from a worm’s view.
I was walking along Main Street, minding my own business, when someone
hit me on the back of the head with enough force to knock me down.
Actually, I spun around and landed on my rear end, sitting against Bill
Ireland’s hamburger joint.
I wasn’t hurt; the blow probably hurt the guy’s fist more than my head. I
wasn’t mad at anyone, so I just sat there and watched the action.
The fight that had produced the blow to my head was swirling around right
over my head. Another one, a spinoff, was starting.
Just then, Ken Gorton, Frank Naylor and George Callihan arrived. They
lined up behind the fighters and slowly pushed them toward the beach.
They just went along, not trying to break up any of the fights, which had
escalated into five separate fights by the time they reached the
boardwalk.
The three officers pushed the combatants out onto the sand and just stood
there, punching them back onto the sand when they tried to get back up.
Pretty soon all the fights died out. I guess it’s pretty hard to fight in
the darkness in soft sand.
One by one, the former combatants straggled off the beach, all the fight
gone out of them.
When the last had left, Callihan walked by and said, “Bob, you can come
out now.”Years later, Chief Hodgkinson explained to me that his constant
worry was that one of those fights would spill out of that one block of
Main Street and spread through the rest of town. It never happened,
thanks to three rather elderly and somewhat pudgy police officers whose
names were George Callihan, Frank Naylor and Kenny Gorton.
* JUDGE GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and former judge. His column
runs Tuesdays.
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